Icelandic Folklore

Icelandic Folklore

i ICELANDIC FOLKLORE AND THE CULTURAL MEMORY OF RELIGIOUS CHANGE ii BORDERLINES approaches,Borderlines methodologies,welcomes monographs or theories and from edited the socialcollections sciences, that, health while studies, firmly androoted the in late antique, medieval, and early modern periods, are “edgy” and may introduce sciences. Typically, volumes are theoretically aware whilst introducing novel approaches to topics of key interest to scholars of the pre-modern past. iii ICELANDIC FOLKLORE AND THE CULTURAL MEMORY OF RELIGIOUS CHANGE by ERIC SHANE BRYAN iv We have all forgotten our names. — G. K. Chesterton Commons licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0. This work is licensed under Creative British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. © 2021, Arc Humanities Press, Leeds The author asserts their moral right to be identi�ied as the author of this work. Permission to use brief excerpts from this work in scholarly and educational works is hereby granted determinedprovided that to thebe “fair source use” is under acknowledged. Section 107 Any of theuse U.S.of material Copyright in Act this September work that 2010 is an Page exception 2 or that or limitation covered by Article 5 of the European Union’s Copyright Directive (2001/ 29/ EC) or would be 94– 553) does not require the Publisher’s permission. satis�ies the conditions speci�ied in Section 108 of the U.S. Copyright Act (17 USC §108, as revised by P.L. ISBN (HB): 9781641893756 ISBN (PB): 9781641894654 eISBN (PDF): 9781641893763 www.arc- humanities.org print-on-demand technology. Printed and bound in the UK (by CPI Group [UK] Ltd), USA (by Bookmasters), and elsewhere using v CONTENTS Preface ......................................................................... vi Acknowledgements .............................................................vii . Introduction: Stories, Memories, and Mechanisms of Belief 1 ����������������������������������������������������������������������������� Chapter 1. The Dead Bridegroom Carries Off His Bride: Pejoration and Adjacency Pairs in ATU 365 23 . Chapter 2. The Elf Woman’s Conversion: Memories of Gender and Gender Spheres 45 Fylgjur . Chapter 3. The of Iceland: Attendant Spirits and a Distorted Sense of Guardianship 67 ����������������������������������� Chapter 4. The Elf Church: Memories of Contested Sacred Spaces 89 fróði . Chapter 5. The Stupid Boy and the Devil: Sæmundur Sigfússon, Magic, and Redemption 117 Conclusion ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 141 ............................................................ Select Bibliography 149 Index ......................................................................... 155 vi PREFACE There is someThing inherently offensive about the study of folklore. Inevitably, the student of folklore becomes either an imposter, an opportunist, or (most often) both, because they presume to project objectivity upon something that was never meant to be objectified. The search for such objectivity, further, is an endeavour doomed from the start. Folk stories, as one part of folklore, can never be objectified in the way the student would hope; the folk story is the action being done, not an object upon which something is done. Once it becomes the object, it ceases to be folklore. Scholars normally thecall actors—this kind and of agency the recipients performance, of the yetaction— when the it is hear objectified,ers, the audience,the performance the cultural must life be torn from both the performers of the action— the storytellers, the singers, the dancers, in which the folklore acts. Nor is it enough for the student of folklore to remain quiet and still and allow the story to speak for itself, without interruption or analytical lens, webecause know it for is sure.not possible The best to the hear student or read of anyfolklore story can without hope for,also perhaps, becoming is to a participantparticipate in it. The human mind will always participate in the story being told. This much, at least, in a specific way: by telling the story … and then by telling the story of the story. This volumeThis represents book attempts an effort to understand to participate the originsthus in andfive ofdevelopment the greatest of stories religious ever belief told in the northern world. Iceland and greater Scandinavia through the lenses of five carefully selected Icelandic folktales collected in Iceland during the nineteenth century. Each of these five stories has a story of its own: a historical and cultural context, a literary legacy, influences from beliefs of all kinds (orthodox and heterodox, elite or lay), and modalities (oral or written) by which the story was told. These factors leave an imprint—sometimes discernable, sometimes not— upon the story, and when that imprint is readable, the legacies and influences upon these stories come alive to illuminate a tapestry of cultural memory (that is, a society’s perception of itself, its past, and its prospects for the future) and cultural development that might otherwise be hidden from the reader’s eyes. So much is the aim of this book: to tell the story of five great stories. It remains only to be added that I hope any of the offences that inevitably accompany a study of folklore will here be forgiven by virtue of the deep appreciation and wonder I hold for these (and all) Icelandic folktales, and for the people and the land from which they come. Eric Shane Bryan Saint Louis, Missouri February 14, 2020 vii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS i have accrued many debts during the course of writing this book. I must first thank professors Thomas A. Shippey and Paul Acker for their encouragement and correction of the earliest version of this book. I am also deeply indebted to Professor Terry Gunnell at the University of Iceland, who was a wonderful mentor during my time as a Fulbright researcher and who has continued to be a source of support, encouragement, and friendship throughout this entire process. I also offer very special thanks to Professor Shaun F. D. Hughes for his encouragement even at the earliest stages of this project and for his willingness to review the final version of this book. His keen ofeye whom has saved read draftsme from of various more embarrassing chapters of this mistakes work and than offered I care both to count. encouragement I am also grateful to Gísli Sigurðsson, Ármann Jakobsson, Simon Bronner, and Anne Cotterill— all and correction where needed—and to Margaret Cormack, who was always willing to discuss ideas related to this work. Special thanks to Bruce Smith, who has been a careful reader and source of constant encouragement for this and many other endeavours. I also extend my gratitude to the Fulbright Program, which gave me my first opportunity to travel and study in Iceland, as well as the American- Scandinavian Foundation, the College of Arts, Sciences, and Business at Missouri University of Science and Technology, and the Missouri Research Board, for granting financial support for travel and study in Iceland. I offer special thanks to the Árni Magnússon Institute in Iceland, as well as to the many kind and generous scholars there who permitted me to study alongside them at various times from 2005 to the present. I am also very grateful to Robert Bjork, Anna Henderson, and the other editors at Arc Humanities Press for their tireless efforts during the review and editorial process. Thanks also to my department chair at Missouri University of Science and Technology, Kristine Swenson, who permitted me to run off to Iceland on various research trips whenever I could find the time and money. Last and most important, thanks to my family— my beloved wife, Emily; my son, Everett; and my daughters Bryndís (who was born in Iceland on one of my research trips) and Adelaide—f or their love, support, and patience throughout the writing of this book. viii 1 INTRODUCTION: STORIES, MEMORIES, AND MECHANISMS OF BELIEF Cultural Memory and the Development of Belief folktales in an attempt to understand cultural memories of Christianization and This book traces the origins and development of five post-R eformation Icelandic Reformation in Iceland and elsewhere in the North. While the study of cultural1 memory has in recent years become a keen interest for scholars of the medieval North, relatively little attention has been given to the cultural memory of the post- medieval drawingperiod, and connections even less betweenconsideration Icelandic has2 beenfolktales given collected to what duringpost-medie the eighteenthval folk stories and might contribute to memory studies. The present book seeks to fill that gap by nineteenth centuries—with special attention given to Jón Árnason’s vast collection of tales published in 1862 and 1864—and their earlier counterparts in Old Norse- Icelandic sagas and Eddic poetry. The five Icelandic folktales that anchor the following chapters were selected because they meet criteria that set them apart as especially useful lenses through with to view the diachronic developments of cultural memory in Iceland: (1) each tale has deep and discernible roots in literary history, folkloristic development, and theological undercurrents not only in Iceland but throughout Scandinavia; (2) each displays a distinct concern for one of five fundamental aspects evidenceof religious of belief a demonstrable (respectively, transformation death and mourning, over time gender, of supernaturalhow

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